5 Memphis Cops Fired and a DOJ Investigation Over Tyre Nichols Death. But Police Fail to Explain How Black Man's Face Got Disfigured and Keep the Public's Video Secret while Cops Get Stories Straight

From [HERE] Five Memphis Police officers involved in the traffic stop that preceded the hospitalization and subsequent death of a 29-year-old man were fired Friday evening.

The police department said in a statement that the officers, who had been on the force between two and a half and five years, violated multiple department policies, including those on use of force, failure to render aid and their duty to intervene. Tyre D. Nichols of Memphis died three days after the traffic stop.

Officers Tadarrius Bean, Demetrius Haley, Emmitt Martin III, Desmond Mills, Jr., and Justin Smith were all fired Friday evening. They had been with the department since Aug. 2020, Aug. 2020, March 2018, March 2017, and March 2018, respectively.

"Earlier today, each officer charged was terminated from the Memphis Police Department," a written statement from Memphis Police Chief Cerelyn "CJ" Davis said. "The egregious nature of this incident is not a reflection of the good work that our officers perform with integrity, every day."

The charges mentioned by Davis are internal, department charges, not criminal ones.

The Department of Justice and FBI on Wednesday announced a civil rights inquiry into a traffic stop in Memphis, Tennessee, that preceded the death of a Black man.

Tyre Nichols, 29, died three days after being taken to a hospital in critical condition following the Jan. 7 stop. The Memphis Police Department said the case was referred to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation the next day, and an internal investigation was opened into the incident.

The U.S. Attorney's Office of the Western District of Tennessee announced Wednesday that the FBI's Memphis field office and the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice have also begun looking into the Nichols' death.

Nichols' family has retained civil rights attorney Ben Crump and have demanded the public release of body camera and any other surveillance footage from the stop.

"Nobody should ever die from a simple traffic stop — the footage is the only way to discern the true narrative of why and how that happened to Tyre,” Crump said in a statement Monday.

Nichols died Jan. 10, three days after he was pulled over in a traffic stop.

According to a statement from the Memphis Police Department, officers pulled Nichols over around 8:30 p.m. on Jan. 7 and a "confrontation" ensued. Apparently he was pulled over for reckless driving. However, the police have described how his driving was reckless. Nichols eventually ran away, but was later arrested. Officers said another "confrontation" happened at that point, but he had already been detained.

It was after this that police say Nichols "complained of a shortness of breath," and was taken to St. Francis Hospital in critical condition. Relatives of Nichols claimed the officers involved were in an unmarked vehicle and that he experienced cardiac arrest and kidney failure because of officers beating him. A cause of death has not been released

An image of Nichols shared with the public shortly after his death showed an intubated Nichols. His face was disfigured from a combination of significant welts. His nose was nearly bent into an “s” shape. Blood was seen on his intubation tube and on his hospital sheets. [MORE]

Memphis officials, including police Chief C.J. Davis and Mayor Jim Strickland, said Tuesday the footage would be released after the conclusion of the internal investigation. The police department said it anticipates that happening by the end of the week.

St Paul Approves $1.3M for Police Shooting of Marcus Golden. White Supremacy Mystery Remains Unsolved as Footprints and Tire Tracks in the Snow and Bullet Casings Show Cops Murdered Him as He Fled

From [HERE] St. Paul City Council members have approved a $1.3 million settlement with the family of Marcus Golden, eight years after the 24-year-old Black man was shot and killed by police.

The settlement, approved Wednesday, will dismiss officers involved in Golden's death as defendants in the lawsuit while granting his aunt Monique Cullars-Doty $1.3 million in damages, medical liens and attorneys' fees. Since her nephew's death in 2015, Cullars-Doty has been a visible activist in the Black Lives Matter movement and others decrying police brutality.

The city has also agreed to reserve an area for a memorial bench and plaque dedicated to Golden's memory along the lakeside of Como Park. His family must pay for it.

As part of the settlement, Golden's family will recommend one of their family members join the St. Paul Neighborhood Safety Community Council within six months.

Golden died on Jan. 14, 2015, after officers responded to a 911 call of a man texting death threats from an apartment building's parking lot. The caller identified himself as the ex-boyfriend of Golden's ex-girlfriend, and claimed that Golden stalked him before sending threats. He also said that Golden owned a gun but did not know if he was possessing it.

Officers Dan Peck and Jeremy Doverspike found Golden parked in an SUV behind the apartment building around 2 a.m., exited their squad car and ordered Golden to get out of his vehicle. He refused, and police say that Golden accelerated at high speed towards Doverspike — nearly hitting him.

That's when Peck and Doverspike shot at Golden, striking him before his SUV crashed into parked vehicles. Medics gave him aid, but Golden died on the scene. Police claimed he had a loaded gun within reach when he was killed.

However, the Reinvestigation Workgroup found that it was unlikely that Golden drove towards the cops. The group said that the footprints and snow tracks in the snow demonstrate that he drove around cops and they chased on foot and fired at him. The report also shows that the gun cartridge casings don’t support the police version of events parroted by white media.

The Reinvestigation Workgroup issued an 87-page report on Marcus Golden’s case and summarized some main points at the January 19 press conference, ranging from analyzing prints in the fresh snow, to doctored reports of 911 calls. Golden’s gun was seemingly planted in the car after it was found in a shockingly brazen search of his room at this grandparents’ house right after he was murdered. Police told lies about Marcus’ character and background, manipulating things to try to make him appear unhinged. The exposure of these facts meant, as CUAPB says, “Officers Doverspike and Peck faced the very real possibility of being tried for murder in a civil trial.”

The Reinvestigation Workgroup summary was posted online after the press conference.

The St. Paul NAACP president called for an independent investigation the day of the shooting, saying that the review would "solidify" the relationship between community and police while restoring confidence in the review process. An attorney for Golden's family also called for a civil rights investigation into the case.

Around four months after Golden's death, a Washington County grand jury cleared Peck and Doverspike of wrongdoing. Predictably, the secretive, law-enforcement-driven grand jury process said its cops did not murder Marcus Golden. Doverspike and Peck are still on the force. [MORE]

Communities United Against Police Brutality, a Minnesota organization focused on deterring police violence that investigated the case, say they have unveiled new details about the circumstances around Golden's death. That report will be released Thursday.

"Since the day he was killed, Marcus' family has worked to clear his name from lies told by St. Paul police to justify his killing," CUAPB said in a statement, adding that their own investigation, aided by a hired ballistics expert, "uncovered and documented many new facts about the incident that repudiate the initial investigation and paint a very different picture of what happened to Marcus at the hands of police." [MORE]

2 Butler Cops Caught Repeatedly Punching a Black Woman in the Face. Racist Media Pretends the Incident was About a Missing Order at McDonalds, Not White Supremacy or Uncontrollable, Immoral Authority

From [HERE] An incident that led to a Butler Twp. police officer hitting a woman multiple times in the face that was caught on video Monday began as a dispute over missing cheese on a Big Mac.

That police officer was placed on administrative leave and the woman, charged with resisting arrest and three other charges, has sought the services of Attorney Michael Wright and the Dayton Unit of the NAACP.

The video, recorded and published by a bystander online after the incident, shows two officers arresting Latinka Hancock, 31 of Dayton and one was seen punching her. Police camera video shown at a Butler Twp. press conference Wednesday gave more details about the incident.

Butler Twp. officers Sgt. Todd Stanley and and Tim Zellers responded at 4:20 p.m. Monday to a call about a disorderly customer at the McDonald’s at 3411 York Commons Blvd., and on arrival, officers approached Hancock, according to a police report.

In body camera footage, Hancock explains the dispute with McDonald’s employees, stating she had entered the restaurant, after initially ordering food through the drive thru. Hancock said she paid for extra cheese and did not receive it.

In their report, the officers said that Hancock was backing out of her parking spot at the McDonald’s when they arrived, but that they had been asked to trespass Hancock. [in other words the police stopped her unlawfully because they did not personally witness her commit any driving infractions or crimes at the time of the stop].

When asked for a driver’s license, Hancock said that she didn’t have one, and refused to provide her identification.

The exchange became more heated, when one of the officers decided to place Hancock under arrest. [Arrest for what? No disorderly was going on when cops were present. Dependent media doesn’t investigate such Issues because it is a tool of authority.]

According to the officers, Hancock then resisted arrest, leading to one of the officers threatening to use a Taser on her, and then the other hitting Hancock on the right side of the face with an “open palm strike.” [Said narrative contradicts the video in which there were repeated strikes to the face with a closed fist.]

Hancock was placed in handcuffs and put into the police cruiser.

According to the report, Hancock was bleeding from her mouth, and a medic was called who cleaned the wound and determined it was superficial.

Hancock was charged with resisting arrest, failure to disclose personal information, driving under suspension and open container of alcohol in a vehicle, the report said.

During the Wednesday Butler Twp. press conference, Chief John Porter said Stanley, who was the officer seen striking Hancock, is on paid administrative leave pending an internal investigation. Stanley has served on the Butler Twp. police force for more than 22 years. Zellers has not been placed on leave, Porter said. He has served the department for around 2 1/2 years.

Hancock, represented by attorney Michael Wright, of Wright and Shultze, and accompanied by Dayton Unit NAACP President Derrick Foward, also held a press event on Wednesday.

“I want to be clear that this incident should have never occurred in the first place. McDonald’s should be ashamed for resorting to calling the police over a disagreement over an order they got wrong,” Wright said. “If they can’t manage basic customer service, opting to potentially put a person’s life in jeopardy over a mishandled Big Mac, it doesn’t seem for Black people to and eat at McDonald’s anymore.”

A visibly shaking Hancock answered questions during the press conference, at times becoming emotional.

“I’m glad that I’m able to be here to be honest. I don’t want people to feel like I’m complaining over a piece of cheese,” she said. “I went in with good intentions. I came with everything; I brought back the sandwich, the fries and the receipt ... I want(ed) either the sandwich or my money back.”

Hancock said she witnessed an interaction between the manager of the store and the employee who had come to the cash register to request she pay the additional fee, during which the manager instructed the employee to remake the sandwich.

“So you went out of your way to not do what was asked, then you want me to leave?” Hancock said, adding that she did subsequently leave to “decompress” in the parking lot prior to police arrival.

“I made sure that I at least tried to show that my demeanor wasn’t threatening,” she said.

Wright said his firm is waiting for additional videos inside McDonald’s and information from the police department before deciding on any potential lawsuits.

Derek Chauvin Asks Court to Void Verdict After the White Minneapolis Cop Murdered George Floyd in the Street

From [HERE] An attorney for Derek Chauvin asked an appeals court Wednesday to throw out the former Minneapolis police officer's convictions in the murder of George Floyd, arguing that legal and procedural errors deprived him of a fair trial.

Floyd died on May 25, 2020, after Chauvin, who is white, pinned the Black man to the ground with his knee on his neck for 9 1/2 minutes. A bystander video captured Floyd's fading cries of “I can't breathe.” Floyd’s death touched off protests around the world and forced a national reckoning with police brutality and racism.

Chauvin’s attorney, William Mohrman, told a three-judge panel of the Minnesota Court of Appeals that the trial judge should have moved the case out of Minneapolis because of extensive pretrial publicity and unprecedented security precautions due to protest fears.

“The primary issue on this appeal is whether a criminal defendant can get a fair trial consistent with constitutional requirements in a courthouse surrounded by concrete block, barbed wire, two armored personnel carriers, and a squad of National Guard troops, all of which or whom are there for one purpose: in the event that the jury acquits the defendant,” Mohrman said.

But Neal Katyal, a special attorney for the state, said Chauvin got “one of the most transparent and thorough trials in our nation’s history. ... Chauvin’s many arguments before this court do not come close to justifying reversal.”

Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill sentenced Chauvin to 22 1/2 years after jurors found him guilty of second-degree murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter. Chauvin later pleaded guilty to a separate federal civil rights charge and was sentenced to 21 years in federal prison, which is he is now serving in Arizona concurrent with his state sentence.

“Judge Cahill managed this trial with enormous care, and even if Chauvin could identify some minor fault, any error is harmless,” Katyal said. “The evidence of Chauvin’s guilt was captured on video for the world to see.”

Appeals Judge Peter Reyes said Wednesday that the court would rule within 90 days. Chauvin did not attend the oral arguments, but Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, who assembled the prosecution team, sat in the front row.

Even if Chauvin wins his appeal, his federal sentence will keep him in prison longer than his state sentence likely would because he would qualify for parole earlier in the state system.

Mike Brandt, a Minneapolis defense attorney who has been following the cases arising from Floyd’s murder, said a victory at appeal “would be functionally meaningless” and that Chauvin’s time in prison is “pretty well locked in stone” given his federal sentence. [MORE]

Although Latino Man Immediately Got on the ground and held his hands above his head, Denver Cops Still Shot Him 19X in the Back. State Attorney Seeks to Have His Jury Verdict Dismissed

From [HERE] Almost 10 years to the day after Denver police shot at Michael Valdez 19 times while he lay on the ground in surrender, lawyers for the city were back in court seeking to throw out his excessive force lawsuit.

This time, Valdez was armed with a jury's verdict finding Denver liable for failing to train its officers on a specific category of deadly force, along with $2.5 million in damages jurors awarded him in 2021. But the city claimed the trial judge so mishandled the case that Valdez's allegations never should have went before a jury in the first place.

During oral arguments on Tuesday before a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit, the city argued the single incident Valdez used to illustrate Denver's failure to train its officers — his own January 2013 shooting — was not a viable constitutional violation.

"It’s undisputed that Denver trains on the constitutional limits of the use of lethal force," said Katherine Field of the Denver City Attorney's Office. "And that alone should foreclose any single-incident municipal liability claim."

In Valdez's case, Sgt. Robert Motyka Jr. shot him repeatedly after a vehicle chase in which Motyka himself was shot. The question for Valdez's jurors was whether his injuries were a product of Denver failing to train its officers that deadly force should not be used "out of adrenaline, or anger, after heaving been shot at or struck," or as a means of retaliation.

Some members of the 10th Circuit panel were unsure that question could be resolved solely by looking at the law, and required asking a jury to sort out what actually happened.

"Here you have the officer’s been shot, right? Chasing the truck, getting shot at, getting shot," said Judge Scott M. Matheson Jr. "And officers get involved in chasing fleeing felons — at least maybe not every day, but it’s not an unusual circumstance. So why wouldn’t it be obvious that if you have an officer who's involved in a chase, he gets shot, he needs some guidance on what to do next?"

On Jan. 16, 2013, Valdez accepted a ride in a pickup truck from acquaintances, not knowing police were looking for the truck in connection with multiple reports of violence in the Denver area. An officer spotted the vehicle after it picked up Valdez and a chase ensued. Other occupants of the truck, but not Valdez, shot at officers, hitting one of them in the shoulder.

The wounded officer — Motyka — continued with the pursuit until the truck crashed near 39th Ave. and Osage St. In Valdez's telling, he exited the truck, immediately got on the ground and held his hands above his head. It was undisputed that Motyka began shooting Valdez, joined by Lt. John Macdonald, who shot because he saw Motyka shooting. One bullet destroyed Valdez's finger and another seriously damaged his bowel and spine.

Valdez was taken to the hospital, where he had to be resuscitated. The bullet that entered his back injured his spine, and his finger had to be amputated. He was then charged with fifteen criminal counts, including attempted first-degree murder, for the shootout, and four counts related to Montoya holding up his relatives at gunpoint, even though Valdez never used a gun and wasn't involved in Montoya's previous crime. Valdez spent over two months in jail before Denver District Attorney Mitch Morrissey dismissed all the charges.

The Denver City Attorney's Office has been fighting Valdez in court since the original complaint was filed in 2015. All other officers involved in the chase and shooting have been cleared. [MORE]

Motyka subsequently received an award for his actions, and Denver's then-manager of safety said Motyka "acted appropriately and reasonably to stop the imminent threat posed by Michael Valdez."

In 2015, Valdez sued multiple officers and the city for constitutional violations. Eventually, his claims were pared down to Motyka's use of excessive force and Denver's failure to train its officers.

At that point, U.S. District Court Judge William J. Martínez took over the case. In the city's telling, he made a series of questionable decisions that benefitted Valdez. For example, Martínez permitted Valdez to pitch new theories for holding the city liable, not raised in the original lawsuit. Of those, Martínez green-lit one for trial: Denver's failure to train officers that retaliatory shootings were wrong.

"In other words, a reasonable jury could conclude, through common experience and common-sense," wrote Martínez, "that some police officers, once shot at, will believe that the shooter is inviting a gunfight and is therefore fair game for deadly force no matter what happens next, such that failure to train police officers in this regard 'could properly be characterized as deliberate indifference to constitutional rights.'"

The city contended that Martínez was wrong to deny Denver summary judgment, which a judge may do when the key facts are undisputed and the law allows one party to prevail. It also argued Martínez allowed Valdez to repeatedly change his theory for holding Denver liable, and had failed to properly instruct the jury.

Adam Mueller, the attorney representing Valdez, told the 10th Circuit that it was highly unusual for Denver, in its post-trial appeal, to not rely on the evidence introduced at trial. He defended Martínez's decision allowing Valdez to hold the city liable for its inadequate training on anger-based shootings, even if there was no pattern of similar incidents.

"There is a category of cases where the need for training is so obvious that the failure to give that training is substantially certain to lead to a deprivation of constitutional rights," Mueller said. "The jury was instructed on that theory. And it is a question of fact whether something is so obvious that the city should have known."

"There have to be some limits on when the jury is allowed to determine this is obvious, even though it hadn’t happened before," responded Judge Harris L Hartz. "Human nature is, 'Once it’s happened, it’s obvious. If it happened, it can happen.'"

He elaborated that a similar situation arises in lawsuits seeking to hold jail officials liable for detainee suicides. One such instance arose last year, when Hartz joined a decision granting immunity to Jefferson County sheriff's employees. At the time, he reasoned they may have been negligent in allowing a mentally-troubled woman to remain alone in a room with implements to hang herself, but their conduct was not a constitutional violation.

"In retrospect it’s pretty obvious you don’t leave a rope in a cell or a sheet in a chair," Hartz told Mueller. "But you have so many cases where summary judgment for a defendant, a law enforcement agency, is granted because of evidence that they hadn’t experienced this before. Why is that not enough to say the verdict here can’t stand?"

Yet, the panel also acknowledged Martínez's belief that a jury could find the lack of training to be obvious at the time.

"There was no guidance on what to do if you’ve been shot," Matheson said.

At the same time the city appealed Martínez's handling of the case, Valdez also asked the 10th Circuit to reinstate his claim against Macdonald, the other officer who shot him. The original trial judge, Richard P. Matsch found in 2019 that Macdonald's conduct did not clearly violate Valdez's constitutional rights. Weeks later, Matsch died and Martínez took over the case.

As the final component of the appeal, Denver, now joined by Motyka, challenged Martínez's award of attorney fees to Valdez.

The case is Valdez v. City and County of Denver et al.

Thanks Again for Your Service NGHR: Jury Upholds the Conduct of VA Cops Who Niggerized and Pepper Sprayed Army Lieutenant at Gas Station by Granting Nominal Award of $3,685

From [HERE] A federal jury in Virginia on Tuesday found mostly in favor of two police officers who were sued by a U.S. Army lieutenant after he was pepper-sprayed, struck and handcuffed during a traffic stop.

Video of the 2020 incident in the small town of Windsor got millions of views after Caron Nazario filed the federal lawsuit, highlighting fears of mistreatment among Black drivers and raising questions about reasonable police conduct.

The jury in federal court in Richmond found former Windsor police officer Joe Gutierrez liable for assault and awarded Nazario $2,685 in compensatory damages, according to attorneys on both sides of the case.

The jury also awarded Nazario $1,000 in punitive damages after Windsor police officer Daniel Crocker illegally searched Nazario’s SUV, the attorneys said. A federal judge already ruled last year that Crocker was liable for the search.

The jury found in favor of Crocker and against Nazario’s claims of assault and battery and false imprisonment, the attorneys said. The jury found in favor of Gutierrez regarding the soldier’s claims of battery, false imprisonment and illegal search.

“Having now heard all of the evidence and learning the full picture of this case, we believe the jury reached the correct decision,” one of Crocker’s attorneys, Anne Lahren, said in a statement. “In the present climate, this took a lot of courage and we thank the jury for their service.”

Nazario filed his lawsuit in 2021. Video shows Crocker and Gutierrez pointing handguns at a uniformed Nazario behind the wheel of his Chevy Tahoe at a gas station. The officers repeatedly commanded Nazario to exit his SUV, with Gutierrez warning at one point that Nazario was “fixing to ride the lightning” when he didn’t get out.

Nazario held his hands in the air outside the driver’s side window and continually asked why he was being stopped.

Nazario also said: “I’m honestly afraid to get out.”

“You should be,” Gutierrez responded. [MORE]

Suit Claims Arkansas Jail Authorities Deliberately Starved Larry Price to Death while He Awaited Trial. Homeless Black Man was Confined in Contaminated Solitary Cell. Couldn't Afford $1000 Bail

From [HERE] Iris Price remembers her brother-in-law as a towering figure who despite his size was gentle and loving, especially when it came to his five nieces. Larry Price Jr., 51, was funny, kindhearted and a “big guy” — 6-foot-1 and weighing more than 185 pounds.

By the time Price died alone in a Sebastian County, Ark., jail cell in 2021, he weighed 121 pounds. Autopsy images show his emaciated body, his cheeks sunken, his collarbones and ribs protruding through his skin and his legs wasted away. The soles of his feet were swollen, white and wrinkled from standing in water in his jail cell.

Price’s relatives allege in a wrongful-death lawsuit filed Friday in an Arkansas federal court that Price, who was unhoused and lived with severe mental illness, was allowed to starve to death over a year in pretrial detention due to neglect by jail staff and its private health contractor. It names the jail, Turn Key Health Clinics and several staffers — both named and unnamed — as defendants.

An administrator with the Sebastian County Jail said in a statement Friday it had medical personnel available to treat inmates in need of care and was conducting an internal review of Price’s case. Representatives for Turn Key Health Clinics did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the complaint.

According to the complaint:

In the early morning hours of August 29, 2021, just over one year after his arrest, a corrections officer found Mr. Price in his isolation cell, lying in a pool of standing water and urine, unresponsive. He was transported to Mercy Hospital by Fort Smith EMTs, where he was pronounced dead. An autopsy performed by the Arkansas State Medical Examiner’s office found that he died from acute dehydration and malnutrition.

When Mr. Price entered the jail, he was a well-nourished, 6’2” tall man who weighed 185 pounds. When EMTs transported him to the hospital, they estimated his weight to be 90 pounds. Photographs taken on the day of his death show Mr. Price’s morbidly skeletal appearance:

There is no excuse for an atrocity like this to happen to a mentally ill man in an American jail. None. In addition to acute dehydration and malnutrition, the medical examiner observed the profoundly shrivelled (or pruned) condition of the soles of Mr. Price’s feet. The following photograph, taken at Mercy Hospital shortly after his death, depicts this shocking observation:

Mr. Price’s grotesquely wilted skin was caused by “prolonged moisture exposure” from the pool of contaminated water on the concrete floor and bunk of his solitary confinement cell. The United States Constitution has long prohibited inhumane conditions of confinement like this. In addition to being cruel and unusual, it was also hazardous. In fact, because of the pooled water in Mr. Price’s cell, the jail’s first responding officers opted not to use the readily available electronic defibrillator, which might have saved Mr. Price’s life.

Larry Price suffered in the tortured throes of his untreated mental disorder for months on end as jail healthcare and security staff watched him waste away—apathetic to his lifethreatening medical and mental health needs and to the cruelty of his confinement. He died not only because of their deliberate indifference and neglect, but also because of systemic deficiencies in the Sebastian County Jail’s policies and practices, which put severely mentally ill people at significant risk of serious harm or death. The constitution mandates better treatment of society’s most vulnerable citizens.

Mr. Price’s estate brings this federal civil rights action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 to redress the violation of his constitutional rights and to hold the defendants accountable for his unnecessary pain and suffering, the loss of his life, and the grief and anguish of his surviving family members.

To Price’s family, his death is especially painful because of how easily it could have been avoided — starting with the decision to put a man with schizophrenia into a system that was never designed to treat him and then holding him without trial for a year over the $100 bail he couldn’t afford. The pain is compounded, they say, by details like the dozens of prison logs that suggest either no one was watching or no one cared as he wasted away, the logs that continued to list him as “OK” — even after he had died.

The family’s attorney, Erik Heipt, whose Seattle-based practice Budge and Heipt specializes in wrongful death and police brutality, called Price’s death one of the worst he’d seen in almost 20 years of handling these cases. [MORE]

2 Racist Suspect IL Paramedics Charged w/Murder of a Black Man who was Having Difficulty Breathing. Prior to Smothering Him to Death said, “Quit acting stupid. Sit up, Now! I’m not playing today!”

Is it Possible for Racists Provide Public Service to Non-Whites? From [HERE] Two paramedics are facing murder charges after a man died in their care in Springfield, Illinois.

Peggy Finley, 44, and Peter Cadigan, 50, are accused of improperly restraining Earl Moore Jr. in preparation for an ambulance ride leading to his death on Dec. 18.

“They didn’t show any compassion whatsoever,” said Teresa Haley, local NAACP president, during a press conference Tuesday.

The night of the incident, police told WCIA Moore called 911 because “he saw multiple people inside with guns.”  

Body camera video shows Springfield police officers arriving at Moore’s apartment. A woman hysterically tells the officers the 35-year-old is hallucinating. The woman then invites the officers inside the apartment and directs them to Moore’s bedroom.

Moore, who is Black, is seen lying in bed on his back, sweating and breathing heavily. As officers gauge his situational awareness by asking him if he knows his name and what year it is, they call for an ambulance.  

About 15 minutes later, Moore rolls onto the floor as Finley and Cadigan, both white, walk into his bedroom. Finley stands over a prone Earl and appears to try to pull him up by grabbing one of his arms

She is heard yelling at a distressed Moore, “Quit acting stupid. Sit up, now! I’m not playing with you today!”

Body-camera video continues to show a frustrated Finley continuing to berate Moore. 

She yells, “you’re going to have to get up and walk because we ain’t carrying you. I’m seriously not in the mood for this dumb s—t,” Finley said.

Police eventually help Moore out of the house and onto an awaiting paramedic gurney, the video shows. Finley and Cadigan then strap him onto the gurney face down and cover him with blankets for the ambulance ride to the hospital.

Moore was transported to HSHS St. John’s Hospital’s emergency room, where he was pronounced dead at 3:14 a.m., NPR reports.

The Illinois State Police launched an investigation into Moore’s death. An autopsy conducted on Dec. 18 determined the cause of death was “compressional and positional asphyxia due to prone facedown restraint on a paramedic transportation cot by tightened straps across the back and lower body.”

Sangamon County Coroner Jim Allmon ruled Moore’s death a homicide.

Sangamon County State’s Attorney Dan Wright charged Finley and Cadigan with first-degree murder. Under Illinois law, first-degree murder is when a person “kills an individual without lawful justification. He or she intends to kill or do great bodily harm or knows that such acts will cause death.”

Wright said Finley and Cadigan should have known, based on their EMS training positioning Moore the way they did could lead to death.  

“Knowing, based on their training, experience and surrounding circumstances, that such as would create a substantial probability of great bodily harm or death,” Wright said during Tuesday’s news conference.

“It’s almost worse than putting your foot on somebody’s neck. This guy was already hyperventilating and having difficulties breathing then he’s put on the stretcher facedown. It was hostile,” Haley said after reviewing the body-camera footage.

A spokesperson for LifeStar Ambulance Service, Inc., Finley and Cadigan’s employer, told Atlanta Black Star by phone, “the case is still under investigation, and we cannot comment.”

Wright said potential penalties include a range of 20 to 60 years in prison if Finley and Cadigan are convicted.

Hundreds Of Chicago Public School Teachers Raped, Sexually Assaulted, Groomed Black and Latino Students In 2022

ACCORDING TO US NEWS Chicago Public Schools contains 649 schools and 341,382 students. The district’s minority enrollment is 90%. ? Whats a minority? HERE, IT MUST MEAN LOSER IF 90% are black or latino. did you know that 90% of the world is also non-white?

From [HERE ] Hundreds of teachers in Chicago’s public school system raped, sexually assaulted, and groomed students last year.

According to a report released by Chicago Public Schools’ Office of the Inspector General, the 2021-2022 school year saw 772 investigations into teachers for allegedly raping, sexually assaulting, or grooming students.

The office was able to close 600 “adult on student” cases in the past year, and substantiated more than half of the allegations. Despite that, only 16 of the cases have resulted in charges.

Some cases involved taking trips to Las Vegas, Ibiza, London, and the Bahamas for sexual purposes.

While the majority of cases involved high school students, some involved children as young as fourth grade.

One Chicago teacher “groomed and sexually assaulted” a 17-year-old student on three separate occasions.

“She began to think of him as her friend and therapist,” according to the student. The teacher “touched and groped the student while hugging her, touching her thighs and buttocks under the pretext of removing lint from her clothing.”

Those allegations were corroborated, but while the teacher was charged with multiple counts of sexual assault, he was acquitted in November. He is currently battling his termination with the Illinois State Board of Education.

A Junior ROTC staffer reportedly had sex with a female student from the ages 16 to 17-years-old, and would buy her alcohol. He also asked her to buy him marijuana from other students.

Some texts between the staff member and the student were highly sexual, including “I’m ready to f*** right now … I’m not gonna be gentle either.” The staff member also “threatened to kill the student and her family” if she told anyone about the relationship.

Yet another incident involved a teacher asking “a fourth-grade student why her lips were chapped, and then stated that the student’s lips were chapped because she was ‘sucking dick.'”

One gym teacher exposed himself to a sophomore girl and sent a different 15-year-old student “photos and videos of himself masturbating and engaged in other sexual acts.”

An elementary school teacher “sexually touched” a male student over the course of several years, from ages 11 to 14. That teacher “spent the night in the student’s bedroom, having sex with the student.”

As Breitbart News reported, the Biden administration attempted to end the Trump-era reporting requirements for teachers who sexually assault students. Such a proposal would have seen only the 16 allegations with criminal charges included in national numbers, not the full 772.

It would have also made it easier for school districts to continue “passing the trash — relocating predator teachers without disclosing their conduct to the new district,” according to former Education Secretary Betsy DeVos.

Mostly White Liberal Cities that Cracked Down On Mostly Black Homeless People Get Hit with Legal Challenges (NYC, SF and Dallas)

WASHINGTON DC ON 1/14/2023. PHOTO IS THE PROPERTY OF THE UNDECEIVER VINCENT BROWN.

From [HERE] Many cities that cracked down on homelessness have been hit with legal challenges over their new restrictions.

New York City, Dallas, and other cities that tried to aggressively address their homeless problem — and the drug, crime, and public nuisance issues that accompany it — are now defending their policies in court.

In New York City, civil rights groups are attempting to block Mayor Eric Adams’ initiative to hospitalize homeless people who are severely mentally ill and appear to be a danger to themselves.

“If severe mental illness is causing someone to be unsheltered and a danger to themselves, we have a moral obligation to help them get the treatment and care they need,” Adams said when he announced the plan.

In December, several civil rights groups asked a federal judge to block the policy, claiming it is unconstitutional and violates the Americans with Disabilities Act.

New York’s policy sometimes involves confiscating homeless people’s belongings as they are removed from public property and taken to a hospital. The city’s move comes amid concerns that the city’s homeless crisis is becoming more visible and spiraling out of control.

Also last month, Dallas was sued over its October policy restricting people hanging around road medians, where homeless people often panhandle. City officials said the policy is for public safety because people can get hit by passing cars. However, the homeless people and their advocates who sued the city argued the policy violates their First Amendment rights.

Albuquerque was sued last month by homeless people and the ACLU of New Mexico for removing homeless encampments and arresting and fining people living on the street, allegedly violating their civil rights.

Similarly, Phoenix was sued last month by the ACLU of Arizona over sweeps of a huge homeless encampment downtown.

“Rather than confront its housing crisis head-on and invest in sustainable solutions to homelessness, the City is terrorizing the very people it should be helping,” the complaint reads.

WASHINGTON DC ON 1/14/2023. PHOTO IS THE PROPERTY OF THE UNDECEIVER VINCENT BROWN.

In San Francisco, which has one of the nation’s worst homeless and drug crises, homeless people and their advocates sued the city for fining and arresting homeless people as a way to get them out of public spaces. They also complained that the city throws out homeless people’s tents and other belongings without enough warning.

Recently, the Ninth Circuit federal appeals court has limited what some West Coast cities with severe homeless crises can do to address the problem if they can’t offer appropriate shelter.

“It is a serious, serious, problem, probably the biggest crisis we’re facing right now, and I think these decisions are at the heart of what has gone wrong here,” attorney Theane Evangelis, who defended an Oregon city’s homeless policy in the 9th Circuit, told The Wall Street Journal.

“They’ve caused paralysis at a time when we need action,” Evangelis said.

A federal judge has temporarily banned San Francisco from taking those actions to combat the homeless issue, citing Ninth Circuit rulings. [MORE]

Is Kamala Harris a 2024 Frontrunner or a Retiring Golden Retriever for Dems? Said McNegro Empowered Biden and Democrats Not Black People

From [HERE] The 'Say Anything' Candidate. The discrepancy between Harris' migration rhetoric as a candidate and as vice president contributes to the picture of her as slippery, a flip-flopper, hard to pin down. Accusations of fair-weather convictions have dogged Harris for a long time—and for good reason.

In Congress, Harris sponsored a Medicare for All bill; on the presidential campaign trail, she sometimes supported universal health care and sometimes didn't. She tried to shut down the sex work–friendly website Backpage as attorney general of California, then offered support for decriminalizing sex work at the start of her presidential campaign, then later said on a debate stage that she would still arrest men paying for sex. Running for San Francisco district attorney, Harris said she wouldn't use the state's three-strikes policy when the third strike wasn't a serious or violent felony; in office, she went back on that promise. Examples like these are numerous.

Taken together, they paint Harris as someone willing to say whatever is popular in the moment but not willing to follow through or to hold that position when winds even hint at changing. [MORE]

According to FUNKTIONARY:

golden retrievers – a dysphemism describing a variation of the old “Step-N-Fetchit” racist caricature to be revived (in the very near future) in a labor context vis-à-vis Afrikan-Americans and other majorities (so-called minorities).

Black Strawboss NYC Mayor Declares ‘No Room’ for Any More Non-White Migrants in City Run by White Liberals

ACCORDING TO FUNKTIONARY:

BOHICAN – Bend Over Here It Comes Again Negro. ☻Sniggers are the last of the buck-dancing Bohicans. “I am the last of the Bohicans,” he said, “…and I will never be broken. I am the last and worst of my breed—and the final token.” (See: Snigger, Coin-Operated, Samboism, Uncle Tom, Possumist, Turdistan, Piece-Activist, Niggeroe & GOP)

From [HERE] New York City Mayor Eric Adams Sunday traveled to the US-Mexico border and declared that “there is no room” for migrants in his city. Adams called on the US government to help larger cities manage unprecedented levels of immigration and claimed that the influx of migrants could cost NYC up to $2 billion.

“The federal government should pick up the entire cost, what El Paso is going through, and all of the other municipalities, and we need a real leadership moment from FEMA. This is a national crisis,” Adams said. He also criticized the governors of Colorado and Texas for contributing to the “manmade humanitarian crisis,” citing “busloads” of migrants arriving from the southern border.

During his visit, Adams met with El Paso, Texas, Mayor Oscar Leeser and visited areas where migrants often cross the border. NYC Comptroller Brad Lander criticized Adams’ address, stating that it “reinforces a harmful narrative that new migrants themselves are a problem.”

In early January, President Joe Biden introduced reforms to border security, allowing authorities to turn away Central American asylum seekers who try to enter the country illegally. The US government expanded legal pathways for asylum seekers and will now accept 30,000 people per month from Venezuela, Haiti, Cuba and Nicaragua and allow them to work legally. UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk criticized Biden’s approach, stating the right to seek asylum “is a human right, no matter a person’s origin, immigration status, nor how they arrived at an international border.”

Pew Research reports that more than 205,000 migrants crossed the US border in November 2022. The historical peak of border crossings was 220,063 in March 2000.

DC Mayor at Odds w/City Council Over New Criminal Code as Black Rolebot Seeks to Put More Blacks in Greater Confinement and Keep DC Jail Over Capacity to Ease the Fears of the White Liberal Votary

ACCORDING TO FUNKTIONARY:

appeasement – the consideration for, complicity in, and compliance with the unjust, irrational and life-negating feelings of others to one’s own and to others detriment—not unlike feeding your children to the alligator, hoping he’ll eat you last. If all you ever do is appease, you’ll never do as you please. (See: Choice, Doership, BOHICAN & Brown-Noser)

From [HERE] The Washington, D.C., mayor and city council are locked in a public dispute over how to respond to rising crime rates and spiraling public tensions over gun violence in the nation's capital.

The D.C. Council voted 12-1 on Tuesday to override Mayor Muriel Bowser's veto of a sweeping rewrite of the city's criminal code. Bowser vetoed the measure earlier this month, saying she opposed some of its provisions, including a reduction in the maximum penalties for burglary, carjacking, robbery and other offenses.

"Anytime there's a policy that reduces penalties, I think it sends the wrong message," she said.

Bowser also expressed concern that a provision expanding defendants' rights to a jury trial for misdemeanor offenses would overwhelm the local court system.

Councilmembers, who originally approved the rewrite by a unanimous vote, expressed frustration with Bowser's stance, saying her objections were minor and could have been addressed earlier if her team had engaged more fully in the multiyear process of rewriting the criminal code. .

Ward 1 Councilmember Brianne Nadeau dismissed Bowser's veto as "political theater." She implied that her intention was to project a public image as a law-and-order executive since she knew her veto would be overridden.

In 2022, there were 203 homicides in the District, about a 10% drop after years of steady increases. Homicides in D.C. had risen for four years straight, and the 2021 murder count of 227 was the highest since 2003.

Crime and public safety dominated last year's mayoral campaign, which saw Bowser fending off a pair of councilmembers to win a third term in office. Both of her challengers -- Robert White and Trayon White, no relation -- accused Bowser of mishandling public safety issues.

Bowser is regarded by Black Lives Matter and other activist groups as a staunch defender of the Metropolitan Police Department, and she has sparred with the D.C. Council in the past over her push to hire more police officers.

The new criminal code will take effect in October 2025. But first it must navigate one last obstacle: a newly Republican-controlled House of Representatives that many D.C. politicians fear is looking for a chance to interfere.

All laws approved by the D.C. Council must pass a 60-day review period during which the House can alter or completely override them. Last year, several conservative Republicans expressed a desire for a more active hand in D.C. lawmaking if Republicans took control of the House in November's midterm elections. [MORE]

Trial for Philly DA Larry Krasner Indefinitely Postponed. Impeached by Racist PA Republicans for Trying to Help Black People

From [HERE] Pennsylvania’s state Senate voted Wednesday to postpone a trial seeking to remove Philadelphia’s progressive district attorney on the heels of a court decision(link is external) that said the impeachment articles don’t meet the constitutionally required standard (article available here (link is external)).

The motion was approved unanimously in the Republican-controlled Senate and indefinitely postpones the trial of Democrat Larry Krasner, which had been scheduled to begin Jan. 18.

It was thrown into doubt by last month’s ruling by the Commonwealth Court, who wrote that the impeachment articles approved by the Republican-controlled House of Representatives didn’t rise to the constitutionally required standard of “misbehavior in office” to remove a public official from office.

Spearheaded by the GOP, the House voted to impeach(link is external) Krasner in November. Krasner has dismissed the House Republicans’ claims as targeting at his policies and sued(link is external) to halt the trial. Democrats say Republicans are abusing their legislative authority.

Krasner, who was overwhelmingly reelected by Philadelphia voters in 2021, has not been charged with a crime or been sanctioned by a court.

The appellate court  agreed with Krasner that the seven claims against him do not rise to the impeachable standard of “misbehavior in office.” Indeed, the court held that three of the claims unconstitutionally intrude upon the state Supreme Court’s exclusive authority to govern the conduct of lawyers in Pennsylvania and that two of the claims improperly challenge Krasner’s discretionary authority as the district attorney.

Black Man Wrongly Imprisoned for 13 yrs Claims Philly Cops Have a Policy of Using False Statements and Fabricated Observations to Manufacture Probable Cause to Make Arrests, Searches and Prosecutions

From [HERE] A federal court in Pennsylvania allowed a resident to bring his municipal liability claims against Philadelphia after he was wrongly imprisoned for 13 years, allegedly due to a custom of allowing officers to obtain probable cause for arrests via falsehoods. His claims for failure to supervise or discipline will proceed because he plausibly demonstrated that the city knew officers would secure probable cause improperly.

Read the ruling here.

California’s Racist Law Enforcement Training Videos

From [HERE] A look at training videos supplied to the LAPD by the California Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training (POST) shows potentially troubling attitudes in policing being taught to police officers taught as part of training videos containing racist stereotypes. POST sets minimum selection and training standards for California law enforcement, and is funded by California taxpayer money as well as criminal and traffic fines.

POST began uploading videos to a YouTube channel more than 11 years ago with an acceptance speech for “Best In-House Developed Application” at the Best of California Awards. But at the time of publication, it had gained only 420 subscribers. The channel features short videos intended for police officers as well as workshops lasting several hours. Many of POST’s videos are released solely on their website as part of a training portal, and some are only available on DVD via purchase from POST.

Though Knock LA has been able to obtain many of the videos via records requests, several videos have been redacted in portions. POST claimed an exemption to records requests which claims that “the public interest served by not disclosing the [full videos] clearly outweighs the public interest served by disclosure of the [full videos].”

Many of the videos available on YouTube are advertisements for POST law enforcement training on basic policing concepts. One video promises to go over the basics of search warrants. Another one provides a refresher about Marsy’s Law. [MORE]

Tennessee Gov Say Authorities Won’t Resume Murdering Prisoners Until Systematic Problems w/the Administration of Its Execution Protocol are Fixed [Death Row is 51% Black, State is Only 17% Black]

From [HERE] Tennessee will not resume executions until it fixes systematic problems with the administration of its execution protocol, Governor Bill Lee has announced. “It’s a very important issue that has to be done correctly,” Lee told reporters on January 5, 2023. “And we will take the time to fix the protocol and to make certain that we don’t move forward until everything’s in place.” 

Lee, a Republican, halted the execution of Oscar Smith on April 21, 2022 after learning that the Tennessee Department of Corrections (TDOC) had violated the state’s execution protocol by failing to test the drugs it intended to use in the execution for possible contaminants. He then granted reprieves to four other prisoners scheduled for execution later in the year and announced that the state had retained former U.S. Attorney Ed Stanton, an appointee of President Barack Obama, to conduct an independent investigation of the state’s compliance with its protocol.

In a scathing 180-page report that was publicly released on December 28, 2022, Stanton found that TDOC repeatedly failed to follow its own protocols in performing seven executions and preparing for an eighth between 2018 and 2022. The report documented a pattern of misconduct or incompetence on the part of execution team members who never provided a copy of the execution protocol to the state’s drug supplier and ignored or failed to inform others on the execution team of the need to conduct testing for contamination and potency. 

“[N]ot one TDOC employee made it their duty to understand the current Protocol’s testing requirements and ensure compliance,” the report said, and TDOC leadership “viewed the lethal injection process through a tunnel-vision, result-oriented lens rather than provide the necessary guidance and counsel to ensure that Tennessee’s lethal injection protocol was thorough, consistent, and followed.”

The Tennessee Supreme Court, which sets execution dates in the state, “certainly understands that we need to create a protocol that is appropriate going forward,” Lee said in his comments to reporters. “And I suspect that the Supreme Court will certainly wait for that plan to be developed in order to plan or to put any executions back on the table.”

Feds Won’t Seek Death Penalty for Racist Walmart Gunman who Allegedly Targeted Mexicans. [Scheduled Murders by White Authorities are generally Reserved for Non-White Defendants and White Victims]

From [HERE] Federal prosecutors will not seek the death penalty for a man accused of fatally shooting nearly two dozen people in a racist attack at a West Texas Walmart in 2019 (article available here (link is external)).

The U.S. Department of Justice disclosed the decision not to pursue capital punishment against Patrick Crusius in a one-sentence notice filed Tuesday with the federal court in El Paso.

Crusius, 24, is accused of targeting Mexicans during the Aug. 3 massacre(link is external) that killed 23 people and left dozens wounded. The Dallas-area native is charged(link is external) with federal hate crimes and firearms violations, as well as capital murder in state court. He has pleaded not guilty.

Crusius still could face the death penalty if convicted in state court.

The prosecutors’ decision could be a defining moment for the Justice Department, which has sent mixed signals on policies regarding the federal death penalty. President Joe Biden is the first president to openly oppose the death penalty and his election raised the hopes of abolition advocates, who have since been frustrated by a lack of clarity on how the administration might end federal executions or whether that’s the objective.

Federal prosecutors are still pursuing the death penalty in the case against Sayfullo Saipov(link is external), who is accused of using a truck in 2017 to mow down pedestrians and cyclists on a bike path in New York City. Saipov’s federal capital trial began last week. The decision to seek death in Saipov’s case came under President Donald Trump, who during his last six months in office oversaw a historic spree of 13 federal executions.